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In 2005, Windsor paid a $5,000 state fine for improperly dumping 200
barrels of drilling fluid and other liquid waste in the area.
Benzene, a carcinogen, has been verified at a residential well a
quarter-mile from the blowout. Windsor paid for a filter on the
well. Dozens of monitoring wells suggest the pollution plume is not spreading.
That doesn't reassure homeowners still awaiting cleanup. "The word has gotten out. If we ever wanted to sell or had to sell our
house, it's going to affect us," Sonderman said. "You can never say never because it's the subsurface and you really can't
say what's going on down there," said Kathy Brown, cleanup project manager
for the environmental quality department. Susan Aholt lived a half-mile from the well. Not long after the blowout,
rainbow-colored sheens appeared in Line Creek, she said. She quit eating
trout she'd catch from the creek. "That's the worst part of it, the feeling that you have absolutely no
control over your environment or your life at that point," said Aholt, who
with her husband, Bob, sold their home and moved away. Doll said the conservation commission has changed its rules since the
blowout. They more clearly state that companies must use pipe and cement
that meet standards set by the American Petroleum Institute. Windsor has been getting gas out of the blowout well, though not as much
as it would like. Attempts last fall to increase production by injecting
pressurized water, sand and chemicals into the well -- an environmentally
controversial practice called hydraulic fracturing -- yielded disappointing
results, company officials said. Thomas, the environmentalist, said Windsor's record should disqualify it
from new drilling in the area. "This is a company that has made mistake after mistake. We still haven't
remedied the problem up here," she said. Not everybody in the valley agrees. Jerry Neal, a former Louisiana rig
worker, abandoned his home for three days after the Windsor well blew. But
he insists the company has taken good care of the people of Line Creek
Valley. "We got to have energy, and until some more is developed, well, we're
going to have to keep developing what we got," Neal said. "I understand
that. I come from an oil country."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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